The Road to Quiet Wonders
Mike Toros


Book by 2025 American Writing Awards Finalist Author.

What if your life was only a rough draft  and the real story waited just beyond the next bend in the road?

When a man walks away from the weight of routine, he finds himself on a journey that is equal parts road trip and rediscovery. From rain-soaked cafs in Portland to the burning silence of the Nevada desert, from brief encounters with strangers to starlit nights that feel infinite, every mile reveals not only the vastness of the American West but the hidden landscapes of the heart.

The Road to Quiet Wonders is a novel about solitude, fleeting connections, and the fragile miracles woven into everyday life. Its about learning to see again  to notice the silence, the laughter, the small gestures that make us human.

For readers of Nomadland, On the Road, and The Remains of the Day, this is a lyrical journey that proves sometimes the greatest adventure is coming home to yourself.





Mike Toros

The Road to Quiet Wonders





Dedication


Dedicated to my parents  the architects of my understanding of love that love is a language spoken in decades, not words.




Acknowledgment


I express my gratitude to Christopher Sanborn and my sister Katharina R?llichfor inspiring me to immerse in work, my father for his guidance in creating the piece, my mother for her attention to detail in the book, and my editor, Sam Neilson, and his team (Eric Wilson, Martin Garret and others) for their quality and meticulous work!




Chapter 1: Mornings with Tibetan bowls and no-obligation coffee


This was my third year living in Portland.



The city turned out to be kind, not in the sense of hugging in the street and going to visit, but in its restraint: no one prying into your soul, everyone smiles just enough so that you don't feel like a stranger, but you don't have to get close either. People have enough tact to leave you alone. That was exactly what I needed.

I rented an apartment in a neighborhood where my neighbor downstairs meditated to the screams of his cat, which, judging by the sounds, regularly lost fights with the vacuum cleaner.

And here lived I, a man who just wanted to drink beer on Fridays and watch the mold on the windowsill leisurely take over the area, as if conducting its own quiet expansion.

On weekends, I went to the same caf around the corner, where they had long known my order but never asked my name. It's the perfect relationshipwarm, but without commitment.

The barista with a Carpe Diem tattoo on his neck would always ask, Hows it going? but never listen to the response. Once, I tried to say, A stray raccoon hung itself in my fridge, and he just nodded and asked, With syrup?

That morning, I was awakened by the sound of Tibetan singing bowls. It was my downstairs neighborthe same one who was meditating to the screams of his cat. It seems he decided to finally move to a new level of spiritual awarenesson Saturday at 6 a.m.

I lay there, staring at the ceiling, thinking that maybe this was a signit was time to get up and go to that caf. Getting ready took me two or three hours.

The rain outside was falling with just the right intensitynot enough to say just drizzling, but not quite we need to build an ark! Perfect for putting on jeans that had been damp for the second day in a row and pretending it was a vintage effect.

I decided to go closer to the city center after all, introducing a minimum of variety into the routine I had already become accustomed to.

I'm parked. A girl with a cactus tattoo on her wrist and a cup of latte in her hands sat in the caf across the street. She was looking out the window, and I thought: Here it is, typical Portland romance.

I went inside, ordered a coffee with milk but no foam. Without taking his eyes off the laptop, the barista muttered, Name?

Thomas, I blurted out for a change, tired of being called Mike.

We sat in the caf, watching as the rain turned the street into a river, and cyclists, like water bugs, skated across the puddles. Portland is a city where rain is not just weather; its more of a lifestyle.

You're not from around here? she asked without raising her eyes from the menu.

No, I replied.

Me neither, she said, finally looking at me. I just moved here.

I nodded, realizing that in Portland, this is almost a mandatory statement.

What do you think of the city? I asked.

Rainy, she replied with a smile.

We both laughed.

You know, she said, setting the cup aside, I always thought Portland is a place where people live in harmony with nature, ride bikes, and drink coffee without milk.

And now you think its a place where people live in harmony with rain, ride bikes, and drink coffee with oat milk? I asked with a smile.

She nodded. Yeah, she replied, smiling broad.

We laughed again.

We sat in that caf for another hour, maybe two. The girl with the cactus tattoo on her wrist introduced herself as Izzy.

Easy? I asked because I hadn't met any easy women yet, except for those who sell their souls for a new iPhone, a trip to Dubai, or just, plainly, for money.

Yes, Izzy. Short for Elizabeth, she said, interrupting my dark thoughts. Then she confessed shed moved here from Phoenix because she was tired of the sun. She wasnt the least bit surprised when I told her I preferred rainy Oregon to cold Siberia.

Can you imagine, she said, waking up every day and knowing it's going to be clear again? It's like living under the curse of some ancient god who hates drama.

I nodded, though I had no idea what she was talking about. The sun has long been something of an ancient myth for me, retold in our town from generation to generation! Legend had it that it had once shone over the city, but whether it would rise again and whether its rays would break through the clouds, no one in Portland knew for sure.

Why a cactus? I asked, pointing to her tattoo.

Oh, its a long story, she sighed. Short version: I wanted to remind myself that even in the driest places, you can survive. Then I moved here, and now its just irony.








Tell me, what did you do in Russia? Izzy asked.

I worked in an office where the main corporate motto was: Were like family here. That means the boss can yell at you like an alcoholic father, but if you quit, he gives you the sad eyes and says youve let him down, I joked.

She laughed.

What about you? I inquired.

Im writing a dissertation on The Impact of Sunny Days in Oregon on the Mental Health of Urban Dwellers, she replied humorously. Though I havent been able to start for a month because every time I sit down to work, its raining outside.

So you're not only the subject of the study, but also the control group, I remarked.

Exactly! she burst out laughing. Science demands sacrifice!

We talked about nothing and everything at once. About how this city has too many cyclists whove adopted the faster than the rain philosophy and now think theyre invulnerable, about how local cats are true survivalists in the eternal damp apocalypse. And oat milk is someone's insidious plot. And about how maybe rain isn't a curse, but just a way of slowing down time.

We talked until closing and left the caf together, but didnt exchange numbersa beautiful incompleteness of the moment.

By then, the rain had turned into something between a sparse drizzle and a hint of the apocalypse.

Izzy pulled out a foldable umbrella with a Keep Portland Weird print (the citys motto), which, judging by its condition, had already surrendered to the elements.

Maybe well do this again sometime? she asked.

If you survive this downpour, I replied.

Deal, she smiled and turned the corner, where a passing cyclist in a plastic poncho nearly knocked her over.

I went home, thinking about how Portland is a city where even encounters begin with rain and end with a hint of a second meeting that probably won't happen. But if it does, it would make a good story for the next coffee shop conversation.

Or maybe not. After all, even the coffee here sometimes turns out to be just coffee.


Chapter 2: 

Sunday market and notebook for forgotten thoughts

The next day, it seemed the rain had decided to take a break. The silence was the first thing I noticed. No blood-curdling yowls, no screeching protest from the downstairs neighbors cat battling another philosophical round with the vacuum cleaner. Just absence. A vacuum of its own kind.

I sat up in bed slowly, waiting for the usual scream to cut through the floorboards. Nothing. This was unsettling, not because I missed its screams, but because the absence of cat wails created a kind of emptiness, as if the television you don't watch suddenly turned off by itself.

It felt wrong. Not in a horror-movie way. More like the wrongness of a missing background humlike when the fridge stops running and you realize its been your soundtrack all along.

I rubbed my eyes and said aloud to no one, Hes either achieved inner peace or eaten the vacuum.

I padded barefoot into the kitchen, the floor cold under my feet. The apartment still held the smell of yesterdays coffee and something elsesomething faintly metallic and damp, like regret left overnight on a plate.

The mold on the windowsill had advanced. Again. The tiny green-black constellation now stretched into a new outpost in the left corner, its territory growing bolder with every rain-drenched morning.

Congratulations, I murmured to it. Youre officially a republic now.

I opened the fridge, hoping for inspiration. The only thing that greeted me was a near-empty beer bottle and half a lemon that looked like it had seen better wars.

I poured myself the last of yesterday's beer into a glass, looked at it, and poured it down the drain.

I watched the amber liquid swirl, catch light in the glass, and then disappear down the drain.

Thats when it hit me.

There was nothing extraordinary about the momentno angel chorus, no cinematic swell of music. Just a thought so quiet it barely made a ripple.

Something had changed.

It wasnt the cat. Or the coffee. Or the beer. It was me.

Yesterday had done somethingtwisted a small knob somewhere inside me. Something about yesterday's meeting with Izzy had shifted the gearsthe familiar mechanism of daily life creaked.

It wasnt dramatic. More like an itch somewhere under the surface, reminding me that repetition wasnt the same as rhythm.I looked out the window. The sky was gray, but it wasn't crying today. Portlands version of mercy.

I dressed and went out. This time, without a clear plan. Not to that caf. Not on schedule.

My left-side neighbors door was ajar. From inside drifted the gentle pluck of a sitar and a sharp voice saying something in Sanskritor possibly just very stoned English.

Hey, Mike! the neighbor called as I passed.

Hey, Arun, I nodded, pausing.

You want to join morning yoga session? Very cleansing. I have kombucha too. Freshly fermented. Very enlightened.

I smiled politely. Thanks, but Im trying to quit enlightenment this week.

He grinned. Suit yourself, brother. Enlightenment will wait.

That's what worries me, I muttered as I moved on.

Outside, the air was brisk, fresh in that Portland waylike the city had showered but forgot to dry its hair.

I walked without aim. Not to the usual caf. Not to the usual bench. Not on the usual route.

Something had shifted. Maybe it was nothing. Maybe it was everything.

The streets felt different when you werent trying to be somewhere. People rushed around mecommuters with their heads down, earbuds in, focused on battles I wasnt part of. For once, I wasnt competing. I wasnt late. I wasnt expected. I was just there.

I wandered into a small alley I had passed a hundred times but never noticed. It was lined with muralsportraits of strangers who probably lived lives louder than mine. One of them, a woman in a wide-brimmed hat, seemed to follow me with her eyes as I walked past. I imagined her saying, Finally taking a detour, huh?

I ended up by a food cart where an old man sold hand-rolled pretzels. His cart was rusted, the umbrella faded beyond its original color. He greeted me like I was a regular, though Id never seen him before.

First times always free, he said, handing me a warm pretzel. But only if you eat it while walking. No sitting allowed.

I smiled, thanked him, and obeyed. The pretzel was absurdly good, better than it had any right to be. And as I chewed, I realized this unscheduled morning had already given me more than many of my planned ones.

Sometimes, not having a destination is the only way to arrive somewhere new.






Downtown was living its Sunday lifethe farmers' market, the smell of roasted coffee and pastries, women in olive-colored coats, and men with beards who looked like they could carve a canoe from a log and read Brodsky aloud at the same time. It smelled like roasted almonds, fresh pastries, and vaguely of rain that had changed its mind.

Locals wandering between stalls like they were browsing not just for produce, but for lost parts of themselves. A man in a leather vest sold pickled asparagus next to a poet hawking handmade zines titled Thoughts That Should've Stayed in the Shower. There was a stall entirely dedicated to mushroomsevery kind, shape, and myth. A child stared in awe at a lions mane specimen while her dad whispered, No, sweetie, that one doesnt roar.

I wandered through it all like someone had dropped me into a collage. My feet moved without a destination. My hands were jammed into my coat pockets. The world, for once, didnt seem to expect anything of me.

Then I saw itthe bench.

Wooden. Half-wet. Wedged between a lavender soap vendor and a woman selling jewelry made from old typewriter keys.

I sat. For a while, I just watched. An older woman with a patchy wool hat argued passionately with a vendor about the price of garlic.

Im not saying its not worth $4, she insisted, Im saying my ancestors would weep if I paid it.

The vendor, a man with brilliant red mustaches, leaned in with theatrical gravity.

Madam, this garlic is blessed by the morning mist of the Willamette Valley. If you bite it raw, your sins evaporate.

Ha! Ive got decades of sins, young man. This better come with a cleansing chant.

I laughed. Quietly. The kind of laugh that slips out without asking permission.

Then I reached into my coat and pulled out the notebook.

It was worn. A gift from a friend back in Moscow who once said, You'll start writing again someday. Probably when you least expect it.

At the time, I had chuckled and said, Ill start writing again when garlic is worth four dollars.

Apparently, wed both been right.

I flipped it open. The first page was blank. Stark and expectant.

It felt like facing a mirror after years of not looking.

The pen was in my hand before I realized it. I didnt think. I just started.

The man with red mustaches looks like he once dated a flamenco dancer and never got over it.

The woman in the patchy hat walks like each of her steps is negotiating a peace treaty.

The city smells like burnt sugar and delayed decisions.

Nothing profound. No flowery metaphors. Just nonsense. And yet, I couldnt stop.

Each line was like turning on a faucet that hadnt worked in months. Rusty at first. Then clearer. Then steady.

A wind passed, lifting a loose page from someones nearby booth and pinning it to my foot. I didnt even notice. I was too lost in motion.

My hand moved like it remembered something my mind hadnt caught up to yet.

I paused only when I noticed a shadow in front of me.

Across from the bench, holding a to-go cup and a familiar smirk, stood Izzy.

Her blonde curls were pinned loosely, a few strands escaping to dance in the wind. She wore the same denim jacket, and yesthere it was againthat cactus tattoo.

She didnt speak. Just sat. Pulled out her own notebooksmaller, paperback, a corner slightly chewed like it had been mistaken for a snack.

She gave me a quick glance and a half-smile, as if to say, Told you this city doesnt let things be one-time things.

I looked at her, then at my notebook, then back.

She sipped her coffee, raised an eyebrow, and went back to scribbling.

And for a few moments, maybe more, we just sat theretwo strange people scribbling on a gray Sunday, surrounded by the scent of cinnamon, the sounds of barter, and the quiet miracle of rediscovering the act of noticing.

Izzy didnt say hello right away. She didnt need to.

She simply sat down on the other end of the bench like it had been saved for her. Like shed always been meant to appear againonly waiting for the right sentence to be written before she entered the page.

I glanced at her over the top of my notebook.

You again, I said.

You were hoping for someone else? she replied, not looking up as she sipped her coffee.

Not hoping. Just not expecting.

She smirked, eyes still on her own notebook. You thought this was a one-time thing too, didnt you?

I always think that, I said, shrugging. I just get it wrong sometimes.

The wind rustled through the market, carrying the scent of rosemary bread and woodsmoke. People buzzed around uslaughing, buying, tastingbut it all felt muted, as if the world had turned its volume down just for our corner of the bench.

Izzy looked up at me then, her gray eyes clear and oddly gentle.

Did you write about me? she asked.

I blinked. Youre going straight for it, huh?

She tilted her head, Im curious. I dont get featured in peoples notebooks often. Or, well ever.

I tapped the closed cover. You made a cameo. Nothing dramatic. No monologues.

She raised her coffee cup in mock salute. Ill take a cameo. Thats better than most first impressions.

There was a pausecomfortable, quiet.

You looked different, I said. At the caf yesterday. More cactus-y.

She laughed, shaking her head. Thats my superpower. Im the same person, but mildly altered depending on the beverage in my hand.

You werent planning to come here, were you? I asked.

She gave a little shrug. Nope. I was walking home from a friends and took a left instead of a right. Ended up at the market. And then there you were. Looking like someone mid-paragraph.

I smiled.

I thought Id be more surprised to see you again, I said. But it feels normal.

Thats because Portland is a city of half-ghosts and repeated strangers, she replied. We all just drift around each other until one day we happen to share a bench.

Her words landed softer than I expectedlike someone handing you a warm scarf you didnt realize you needed.

I studied her for a moment. She wasnt glamorous, not in the way movies paint it. But there was something magnetic about her casual intensitythe way she looked at the world like she was underlining it with her eyes.

Do you always carry a notebook? I asked.

She tapped it. Of course. What else am I supposed to do while eavesdropping on the world?

And what do you write? I leaned in slightly.

Snippets. Impressions. Half-thoughts. Mostly stuff I never reread, she admitted. But if I dont write it down, it vanishes. And I start feeling hollow.

I nodded. I know that feeling.

We sat back, our shoulders not touching but close enough that the warmth of presence started to bleed across the space between us.

A busker began playing something low and slow on a steel guitar nearby. Izzy closed her eyes for a second, absorbing it like sunlight.

I like this, she said suddenly.

The music?

No, she replied, opening her eyes again. This. Sitting here. With someone who doesnt ask too many questions but gets it anyway.

She looked at me for a beat longer than expected, then went back to scribbling something in her notebook.

And in that moment, I realized: it wasnt just the act of running into someone again that mattered.

It was that rare, quiet comfort of seeing a familiar faceand knowing that the moment didnt need to be anything more than what it already was.

We had both gone quiet again.

Not the awkward kind. The sort that settles between people like a shared blanketsoft, a little heavy, and comforting.

I jotted something down without thinking. A sentence about a woman buying too many pears and calling it emotional compensation. It wasnt clever, but it made me smile.

From the corner of my eye, I saw Izzy watching my hand move. She didnt try to hide it. She studied the page the way some people study a strangers shoescurious, not invasive.

Are you writing? she asked suddenly.

Her voice was gentle. Not demanding, just interested. Like she was asking if I was humming a tune or building a sandcastlesomething small and private, but not shameful.

I paused, mid-sentence, and looked over.

Sometimes, I said.

She raised an eyebrow. Thats a yes disguised as a maybe.

I chuckled. I guess its safer than saying yes and having to prove it.

She nodded in understanding. Do you ever let anyone read it?

I hesitated. Then shook my head. Not really. Not yet.

Thats fair, she said, casually opening her own notebook. I dont either. Not the real stuff, anyway.

I leaned back against the bench. Schoolwork is one thing. But the rest of it

She looked over at me, finishing the thought. Its like showing someone your messy room before youve shoved all the clothes under the bed.

I laughed. Exactly. And the laundry talks back.

She smiled. Mine swears.

We both went quiet for a beat, then she said, I always thought writing should be like breathing. Natural. Necessary. But then someone asks to read it, and suddenly it feels like surgery.

Thats because writing is breathing, I replied. But letting someone read it is like asking them to judge how you breathe.

She grinned. Youre full of metaphors, huh?

Side effect of mild insomnia and too many coffee dates with myself.

She tapped the spine of her notebook and looked out at the market. I write things that I dont even understand until weeks later. Like my subconscious is leaving me Post-its.

I nodded. Or like the birds that leave feathers behind, and you only realize they were nesting once theyre gone.

She turned to me, eyes bright. Thats actually beautiful. You should write that down.

I looked down at my notebook. Maybe I already did.

She smiled, then looked at her own page. Mine are more like feral birds. Noisy. Full of typos. Occasionally vicious.

I think everyones early drafts are like birds with broken wings, I said. But theyre still yours. Still alive.

She glanced at me, more serious now. Do you think its okay to keep things just for yourself?

I met her gaze. I think its necessary.

She exhaled like shed been holding something in. Sometimes I worry Im selfish for not sharing more. That maybe arts supposed to be seen.

I considered that. Maybe. But maybe some things arent made to be displayed. Maybe some are just proof that we felt something deeplyonceand didnt want to forget it.

She looked down, running her fingers along the edge of her notebook. Thats how I feel about most of my writing. Like its evidence I existed.

I smiled softly. Then were both in good company.

We didnt need to say anything after that. Just kept writing. Quietly.

Letting our imperfect birds fly messy loops across the pages, uncaged and unseenproof that we were still here, noticing.

The rhythm of the market had started to slow.

The morning chaos gave way to something gentler. Fewer footsteps. More pauses. As if the whole street had taken a breath and decided it didnt need to rush toward anything.

Izzy had stopped writing.

Her pen was resting on the page, still uncapped, but unmoving. She was staring at a food stall across the streetone of those carts that looked like it was built from repurposed barn wood and dreams.

You ever think about leaving? she asked suddenly.

I blinked, pulled out of whatever sentence I had been failing to finish.

Leaving Portland? I asked, cautiously.

Leaving everything, she said. The schedule. The grind. The bike lanes. The mold.

I smiled faintly at the last one. You forgot the coffee snobs and therapeutic tattoos.

She smirked but didnt look at me. I mean it, though. Dont you ever want to just go?

I leaned back and exhaled slowly. Ive thought about it. But then I thinkgo where? Wherever you go, there you are. And eventually, you unpack all the same boxes.

But maybe theres a version of you, she said, turning to me now, that only shows up when the surroundings are new. When no one knows your name or your habits or how you take your tea.

I tilted my head. I dont even know how I take my tea.

She grinned. Exactly. That guywho doesnt knowis the one Im talking about.

I was quiet for a second. Letting her words settle.

That sounds a little terrifying, I admitted.

It is, she replied without hesitation. But maybe terrifying is what we need sometimes. To shake out the parts of us that got stuck.

I nodded slowly. And how do you know where to go?

You dont, she said simply. You just pick a direction. The rest you figure out on the way.

I looked at her, thinking about it. The idea was crazy, and at the same time, there was something liberating.

I cant tell if thats bravery, I said, or just a poetic form of running away.

She looked down at her coffee cup. Cant it be both?

We both smiled, a little sadly.

A moment passed where neither of us spoke. Just sat theretwo people thinking the same impossible thought from different angles.

Then she nudged my foot gently with hers.

So shall we pretend this is a productive morning? she asked, eyebrows raised.

I looked at my mostly incoherent scribbles. Why not? I said. The important thing is not to look at the watch.

She held up her cup. To timeless mornings, then.

I tapped my pen against hers like a makeshift toast.

To mornings with no answers, I added, and the people who ask the right questions anyway.

We didnt say much after that.

Just wrote in our notebooks. Or didnt. Watched a dog bark at its own reflection in a puddle. Let the gray sky hang above us like a tentative promise.

And for the first time in a long time, I wasnt waiting for the rain to start.




Chapter 3: Drafts, Beer, and a Quiet Return to Life









I began writing in the mornings. No strain. Not for anythingjust because otherwise, the day started with emptiness. At first, a paragraph, then a page.

I wrote about how the mold on the windowsill resembled a map of an archipelago, where each speckled country was a forgotten thought, about the smell of morning bread from the bakery. About the old man in the park who feeds the birds every Wednesday and talks to them in French or German; to me, it all sounded equally pleasantly European.

Words came slowly, like drops of coffee from a malfunctioning pot. But they came. A sentence. Then another. Some days, just three. Other days, a paragraph stumbled out like a drunk old friend returning from exile.

There were no expectations. That was the secret.

Some mornings, Id sit for an hour just describing how the light crawled across the floor. It was like relearning how to see. Id forgotten how shadows shift when a cloud passes, how the air near a cup of tea shimmers with heat. I started writing down these tiny things, even if they felt trivial. Somehow, they were more honest than the big words I used to chase.

I stared those sentences longer than I meant to. Not because it was brilliantit wasnt. But because it felt real.

Thats when I realized: I wasnt writing to impress. I was writing to remember. To notice.

The habit grew like a plant I didnt know I was watering. I didnt check the time. I didnt edit. I didnt even read it back.

I just wrote.

My apartment used to be tidy. Or at least predictable in its mess. A few dishes in the sink. Socks with unclear loyalties to any drawer. Books stacked in what I called emotional height order.

But now it looked like a literary tornado had passed through and decided to settle in.

My apartment became an archive of draftsscribbled napkins, crumpled notebook pages, half-finished thoughts They were proof I was noticing again, feeling the world instead of drifting through it. It had become a living, breathing museum of forgotten thoughts, awkward similes, and half-finished truths.

And it felt more alive than I had in months. I didnt plan to keep them forever. I started putting them into a box. Then I realized the one box wasn't enough, and took a second one, but soon filled that too.

There was a strange comfort in having those boxes cluttering the corner of my apartment. Like silent witnesses, they reminded me that I was still capable of creating somethingeven if it wasnt perfect, even if it never would be.

***

It started accidentally.

One night, I knocked over a candle and a piece of paper caught fire. Not in a dramatic, call-the-fire-department wayjust a slow burn, like the paper had been waiting for permission to disappear.

I watched it curl into ash. Watched the words melt into nothing.

And something about it felt right.

The next evening, I made it intentional.

I gathered a handful of draftsthe ones that annoyed me, or embarrassed me, or felt like theyd never go anywhere. The ones I kept re-reading, hoping theyd become better if I stared long enough.

I folded them slowly. Sat by the window. Lit a match.

One by one, I fed them to the flame. Not angrily. Not like rejection. More like release.

There was something oddly intimate about itlike tucking your bad ideas into bed and letting them sleep for good.

The fire danced gently, licking the words out of existence. I didnt feel regret. Just lightness.

Sometimes Id whisper the titles before dropping them into the bowl.

After a while, I started using a small ceramic bowl just for this. I cleaned out the ash once a week. Kept it beside the window.

It became a ritual. A kind of writers compost. Turning what didnt work into warmth and shadow.

There was no audience. No applause. Just the quiet crackle of imperfection being accepted and released.

And maybe, I thought, thats what were all doingtrying to write ourselves clearly enough to be seen, and then letting go of the pages that no longer serve us.

Over time, the act of writing became less about what I captured and more about the simple rhythm of noticing. I began to sense a quiet dialogue between myself and the objects around me. The chipped mug I used every morning had its own silent stories, the crack on the handle a reminder of a day I couldnt quite recall, yet felt nostalgic for. The radiator pipes, which clanged and sighed in the early hours, became characters in my headold and temperamental, complaining about their endless duty.

On weekends, Id sometimes take long walks, not with a notebook, but with an open mind. Id watch the way people touched things without noticinga womans hand briefly brushing against a lamppost, a man tapping his fingers absentmindedly on a caf counter. These tiny gestures found their way into my drafts. Not because they were significant, but because they were real. Because they were happening, quietly, without anyone paying attention.

And slowly, I stopped needing a reason to write. The act itself became the point. I wasnt documenting for a future audience. I wasnt archiving life as material. I was simply learning how to belong to it again. Even on days when the words didnt come, when the page stayed empty, there was a kind of quiet victory in just sitting there, aware, waiting.

The boxes multiplied. I gave up trying to organize them. I liked how they slouched in the corners, untidy but present. Friends who visited would sometimes ask what they were. Id shrug, Thoughts I havent finished. Most of them would smile politely, assuming I meant drafts of stories or poems. But really, they were fragmentshalf-caught impressions that would never grow into anything larger. And that was fine.

One evening, during an unexpected storm, the power went out. With no electricity, no distractions, I lit a few candles and found myself sitting cross-legged in front of the boxes. I reached in at random, pulling out old scraps. Some I didnt remember writing. Some felt like the scribblings of a stranger. Yet they all shared a common thread: they were moments where I had stopped long enough to feel something, to see something, even if I couldnt quite name it then.

I wondered if thats what writing had always been for menot a way to explain life, but a way to notice it before it slipped away.

When I started working at the sauna, I had a place where I could burn them. Watching the paper curl and blacken, Id think about the people walking outside, unaware that the air was now filled with the remains of my small, forgotten sentences.

Sometimes I imagined the ashes drifting up through the night air and settling on someones windowsill across town.

I liked to think I was sending my unfinished thoughts into the sky, where they, disintegrating into tiny particles, would penetrate the minds of passersby on the city streets.

Maybe some molecule of a bad metaphor would land in a poets dreams. Or an overheard line would find its way back into the world in a better form.

Thats what kept me lighting the matches.

Not destruction. But transformation.

Because even broken words deserved a send-off.

Maybe some fragment of my noticing would land softly on their shoulders.

Or maybe not. Maybe the only person who ever needed to see those words was me.








***

The city library became a kind of chapel for me. Not because I prayed there. But because I remembered how to listen there. It smelled of ink, dust, and distant intentions. The kind of place where even silence had layers.

I didnt have a plan. No book in mind. No section to visit. I wandered the aisles like they were trails in a foresteach shelf a different path, each spine a whisper. At the library, I found solace in the smell of old books and the hum of lives unfolding outside the window. I didnt read. I just observed.

People flipping pages. Pens scribbling quietly on yellow pads. Shoes squeaking on carpet. The occasional rustle of a candy wrapper being opened discreetly, as if snack time were sacred and secret.

I watched a man pick up a book, skim the back, put it down, and move on. There was something beautiful in that too. Not every book needs to be chosen.

Some things are just meant to be held for a second. Acknowledged. And left behind.

An older man near the window was fast asleep, glasses sliding down his nose, a large biography of some Russian general open like a tent across his chest. School children dashed across the street, their laughter sharp against the rain. A man hid a flask in his jacket, glancing around as if the world cared.

The sun slipped across the floor in slow stripes, cutting through the tall windows like a soft spotlight on mundane things. Dust floated in the light like forgotten thoughts.

It reminded me that the world didnt need to be extraordinary to be worth capturing.

One day, I watched a teenage girl read a poem aloud to herself, whispering each line, mouthing the words with almost theatrical reverence.

She had no idea anyone was watching.

I scribbled:

Were all our truest selves when no ones grading the sentence.

The library didnt heal me. Thats too dramatic.

But it did something smaller.

It made me pay attention again. To softness. To small textures. To people living their stories quietly beside mine.

I jotted down these moments, not to capture them, but to remember I was part of them. Writing wasnt about becoming someone elseit was about returning to myself, one quiet observation at a time. To put the lost self back together.

At some point, I realized this was my new lifenot an attempt to become someone greater, but a slow return to myself, to the person who notices the little things.

It was like gathering myself back together. Without the desire to hurry. Without the goal of "becoming a writer." I was simply becoming the person who notices something, feels something, rather than just processing day after day.

I began to crave those unnoticed corners of life, the places where nothing significant ever seemed to happen. The way the librarian hummed to herself when shelving books, a soft melody lost under the fluorescent lights. The way the rain gathered in perfect circles on the bench outside, marking time in ways no clock ever could. I would sit in the librarys corner seat, not to escape the world, but to feel connected to it in a quieter, less demanding way.

There was a certain kindness in these observations, a gentleness I had not allowed myself for a long time. No pressure to label or define, just the simple act of being present. I realized that I didnt need grand narratives or complex characters to justify my writing. Sometimes, a single sentence scribbled in the margin of a notebook felt more honest than pages of structured prose. A sentence like: The woman by the window turns her teaspoon twelve times before taking a sip. That was enough. It didnt need to be part of a larger story. It was the story.

Slowly, I became more attuned to the quiet rhythms of lifethe unnoticed choreography of the everyday. The barista tapping twice on the counter after placing a cup down. The newspaper vendor flipping through pages with a practiced, almost meditative motion. These small repetitions became a kind of music, a subtle score to my days. And in writing them down, I wasnt just recording them; I was allowing myself to belong to them.

There was a freedom in not needing to turn every thought into something marketable. I didnt owe these observations to anyone. They were mine, like scattered seashells collected along a quiet shore. Each one imperfect, but precious for no other reason than that I had seen it, felt it, and chosen to remember it.

In time, I noticed I was no longer writing to fill the emptiness. I was writing because I had started to care again. Not in a loud, world-changing way. But in the simple way one cares for a houseplant, checking its soil, turning its leaves toward the sun. It was quiet, invisible work. But it was real.




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